As in the case with so many other books, this one has developed from the lectures which I have regularly given for years, and I only comply with an oft-expressed wish of my auditors when I put the substance of these lectures into print from the same As in the case with so many other books, this one has developed from the lectures which I have regularly given for years, and I only comply with an oft-expressed wish of my auditors when I put the substance of these lectures into print from the same point of view as the one by which I have allowed myself to be guided in the lectures. This point of view is that a thorough knowledge of the normal anatomy and histology gives the most certain basis for the understanding of methods of clinical investigation and for judging pathologic changes- hence the reference to ophthalmoscopy, to the physiology of accommodation, and to pathologic processes here and there. I should like to have the book considered from the point of view that it is the eye specialist and not the specialist in anatomy who writes it. For example, I have not gone into comparative anatomy in a detailed way. ...Continua Nascondi